Bartley’s Twitter profile. The Croydon Council staffer has since removed his account

One of Croydon Council’s Neighbourhood Safety Officers, Dorian Bartley, has been suspended as a member of the Labour Party after re-posting anti-Semitic memes on social media.

Bartley’s job at Croydon Council sees him working alongside the police to – as his online profile put it – “deter and reduce crime”.

Bartley was suspended by the Gipsy Hill branch of the Labour Party last week after he was found to have shared an image on Facebook showing Adolf Hitler doing the Nazi salute with the words “we are the master race” above an image of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and alongside the question: “What’s the difference?”

In 2017, the Labour Party’s Chakrabarti investigation into anti-Semitism condemned such comparisons, stating: “It is always incendiary to compare the actions of Jewish people or institutions anywhere in the world to those of Hitler or the Nazis or to the perpetration of the Holocaust”.

Bartley had been his party’s ward BAME officer, responsible for the rights and interests of ethnic minorities.

Bartley’s Facebook and Twitter accounts contained several other examples of re-postings and re-Tweets of offensive and highly questionable material around issues such as race, Russia and the record of Blairite Labour councillors in Lambeth. Bartley has subsequently closed down his social media accounts.

Following his suspension, a Labour spokeswoman said: “The Labour Party is committed to challenging and campaigning against anti-Semitism in all its forms.

“All complaints of anti-Semitism are taken extremely seriously. These are fully investigated in line with our rules and procedures and any appropriate disciplinary action is taken.”

Bartley’s apology was posted on social media

The day following his suspension from the party, Bartley issued an apology. He used social media.

He admitted that the meme which compared Netanyahu to Hitler was “offensive and wrong”.

“… I now realise it was wrong and naive of me to share some of the material I encountered,” Bartley wrote, adding that some Jewish members of the Labour Party had “offered me support in better understanding anti-Semitism” and that he was keen to be better educated in anti-Semitism, racism and the use of social media.

What has not been clarified is Bartley’s position at Croydon Council. Bartley’s postings were, of course, on his personal, not his official, professional, accounts. But it seems incongruous, at least, that someone who has admitted to lacking the awareness to recognise blatant racism should be considered qualified for the sensitive role of neighbourhood safety officer.

Croydon Council had not responded to our enquiry regarding its response to Bartley’s conduct by the time of publication.

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About insidecroydon

News, views and analysis about the people of Croydon, their lives and political times in the diverse and most-populated borough in London.
Based in Croydon and edited by Steven Downes. To contact us, please email inside.croydon@btinternet.com

One Response to Council employee is suspended by Labour over anti-Semitism

Comparing Netanyahu to Hitler is not the same as saying all Jews are Nazis. Perhaps this was a rather clumsy critique of Likud’s ultra nationalist policies. But how is it different from comparing a British politician to an unfavourable historical figure. Just as it isn’t an insult on British people in general for satirists to compare Thatcher to Hitler. Although arguably wrong and unfair in many eyes; as good number revere her as our greatest modern prime minister. My family lost: Husbands, Fathers, brothers fighting in Normandy and North Africa. Whereas Netanyahu’s father i note wasn’t killed by the German war machine and lived to one hundered and two.
it is not anglophobpic to do it to Thatcher and it is not antisemitic to do it to the leader of the Likud party. What should be happening rather than some sort of STAR CHAMBER enforcing some sinster political correctness is that his political party should be paying attention and advocating for what is going on in the world. Say for example the furore of the treatment of asylum seekers in Tel Aviv.https://www.vox.com/world/2018/3/6/17059744/israel-deport-african-migrants-asylum.

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News, views and analysis about the people of Croydon, their lives and political times in the diverse and most-populated borough in London.
Based in Croydon and edited by Steven Downes. To contact us, please email inside.croydon@btinternet.com